Abstract

ObjectivesThe incidence and adverse events of postoperative blood transfusion in spinal tuberculosis (TB) have attracted increasing attention. Our purpose was to develop a prediction model to evaluate blood transfusion risk after spinal fusion (SF) for spinal TB.MethodsNomogram and machine learning algorithms, support vector machine (SVM), decision tree (DT), multilayer perceptron (MLP), Naive Bayesian (NB), k-nearest neighbors (K-NN) and random forest (RF), were constructed to identified predictors of blood transfusion from all spinal TB cases treated by SF in our department between May 2010 and April 2020. The prediction performance of the models was evaluated by 10-fold cross-validation. We calculated the average AUC and the maximum AUC, then demonstrated the ROC curve with maximum AUC.ResultsThe collected cohort ultimately was consisted of 152 patients, where 56 required allogeneic blood transfusions. The predictors were surgical duration, preoperative Hb, preoperative ABL, preoperative MCHC, number of fused vertebrae, IBL, and anticoagulant history. We obtained the average AUC of nomogram (0.75), SVM (0.62), k-NM (0.65), DT (0.56), NB (0.74), MLP (0.56) and RF (0.72). An interactive web calculator based on this model has been provided (https://drwenleli.shinyapps.io/STTapp/).ConclusionsWe confirmed seven independent risk factors affecting blood transfusion and diagramed them with the nomogram and web calculator.

Highlights

  • The incidence with regard to tuberculosis was approximately a quarter of global population and the Mycobacterium tuberculosis causes 1.5 million mortalities annually [1]

  • Full list of author information is available at the end of the article

  • Our prediction model graphically presented all significant associations of blood transfusion in patients with spinal TB undergoing spinal fusion (SF)

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Summary

Introduction

The incidence with regard to tuberculosis was approximately a quarter of global population and the Mycobacterium tuberculosis causes 1.5 million mortalities annually [1]. In TB patients, anemia is a frequent comorbidity with estimated prevalence more than one third [3]. The causes of TB patients with anemia are variable, which mainly include iron-deficiency anemia and anemia of inflammation or both. The conclusion of Minchella et al [3] and Gil-santana et al [4] identified that inflammation is a more plausible explanation for TB-associated anemia. With its insidious onset and chronic progression, patients initially present with back pain and limited vertebral motion in addition to symptoms of TB systemic toxicity. Complications such as clod abscess, kyphosis and neurological deficits may arise if diagnosis and treatment are delayed. Late-onset paraplegia is the most devastating clinical presentation, occurring in 10 to 30% of patients with spinal TB [2, 6]

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